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Jason P. Davis
Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise

Vikas A. Aggarwal
Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise
Keywords
Knowledge Mobilization; Imitation; Innovation; Microfoundations
Journal Article
Research summary. Firms in technology-based settings must mobilize individual knowledge to continuously execute innovative new opportunities. Because knowledge is generally conceptualized at the firm-level, however, there is only a limited understanding of how individual-level knowledge aggregates to firm-level outcomes. The authors develop a microfoundational theory to examine the individual-level foundations of firm-level innovation in the context of imitative competition. A key insight is that despite intuitions that knowledge mobilization should protect firms from rival imitation attempts, knowledge mobilization can often benefit rivals more than the focal firm itself, due to a process of continuous knowledge spillover-sharing amongst rivals. In addition, while knowledge-based advantages are often thought to be temporary without some isolating mechanism, sustainable advantage may emerge under limited conditions under which knowledge-mobilizing firms outrace rivals’ imitation efforts.